Louis D. Brandeis and the making of regulated competition, 1900-1932
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Louis D. Brandeis and the making of regulated competition, 1900-1932
Cambridge University Press, 2009
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book provides an innovative interpretation of industrialization and statebuilding in the United States. Whereas most scholars cast the politics of industrialization in the progressive era as a narrow choice between breaking up and regulating the large corporation, Berk reveals a third way: regulated competition. In this framework, the government steered economic development away from concentrated power by channeling competition from predation to improvements in products and production processes. Louis Brandeis conceptualized regulated competition and introduced it into public debate. Political entrepreneurs in Congress enacted many of Brandeis's proposals into law. The Federal Trade Commission enlisted business and professional associations to make it workable. The commercial printing industry showed how it could succeed. And 30 percent of manufacturing industries used it to improve economic performance. In order to make sense of regulated competition, Berk provides an original theory of institutions he calls 'creative syncretism'.
Table of Contents
- 1. Creative syncretism
- Part I. Brandies and the Theory of Regulated Competition: 2. Republican experimentalism and regulated competition
- 3. Learning from railroad regulation
- 4. The origins of an ambiguous Federal Trade Commission
- Part II. Regulated Competition in Practice: 5. Cultivational governance at the Federal Trade Commission
- 6. Deliberative polyarchy and developmental associations
- 7. From collective action to collaborative learning: developmental association in commercial printing
- Part III. Regulated Competition Contested: 8. The politics of accountability
- Part IV. Conclusion: 9. Civic enterprise
- Appendix A. Industries and number of associations with at least substantial involvement in developmental association, by industry group.
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